THE SINGING GARDEN

The Boobook Owl

Not for any airs and graces
      When, to lonely, silent places
  Men return in memory,
      Come these kindly thoughts of me.
  But they hear again my calling
      Where the dappled moonlight, falling
  ’Mid the shadows of the gums,
      Weaves strange patterns; and there comes,
  Blending with the hobble’s jingle,
      As the faint bush odours mingle
  With the scented camp-fire smoke,
  Suddenly my call—
              “Mopoke!”

Now a  weary swag man camping
      After miles of mountain tramping;
  Now, ’mid spinifex and sand,
      A drover of the overland;
  Now a timber-getter sitting
      In his hut, the firelight flitting
  O’er his old face, lost in dreams;
      Now the man who punches teams
  Where the blacksoil plains go rolling;
      Now a fossicker, pot-holing,
  Hopeful ever, ever broke—
  Hears me in the night—
              “Mopoke!”

Never while one bushland lover
      Camps beneath the great sky’s cover,
  And my call comes once again
      To the ears of lonely men:
  Never while to silent places
      Memory of old days traces
  Olden pictures in the fire,
      And men dream of youth’s desire,
  Dream again of youth’s high daring:
      Never while men yet go faring
  Forth beyond the ken of folk,
  Shall my night call fail—
              “Mopoke!”